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#1 |
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diyAudio Member
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This is a call to all the forum members that have a knowledge of transformer design. You guys are in here I have read snippets of information posted from time to time.
What Is being tried is a copy of a design shown here. I have been in contact with Arto Kolinummi (one of the co-designers ) and asked him if he would mind an attempt at reverse engineering the full range transformer that he and a friend created. HE said go for it! http://www.ele.tut.fi/~artoko/audio/audioindex.html Check out the full range transformer section. From what I can gather the trannie is constructed iin a manner that permits it to have a wide frequency response into a capacitive load ( those big ESL panels ) As a step up trannie does effect the sound of an ESL it's surprising how many designs stand on the shoulders of others. What they did was actually legitimate design and engineering. The actual design and engineering work is above my current knowlege of transformers. I'm not familiar with the techniques of interleaving and so forth. Maybe someone could direct me to a good source book. But the actual winding is probably within my capabilities. But I'm pretty sure that there are members that could take a stab at it. A basic question is what kind of ferrite for is used for the core? THe circuit board in the front of the picture is the HV bias supply nothing to do with the trannie. Thanks! Mark
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Mark |
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#2 |
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diyAudio Member
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No one out there??
How about some pointers on ferrite that has acceptable permiability at audio frequency? MArk
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Mark |
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#3 |
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diyAudio Member
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MARK KRAVCHENKO wrote:
Hello Arto! I am putting together the parts needed to clone your full range esl. Would you allow me to post a questiojn on the DIYaudio forum about how it may be possible to clone the stepup transformer? I understand that you were a part of the design so I wanted to ask your permission first if that is possible. I think that next to the surface area, the insulation and the resistive treatment the stepup transformer is the biggest part of determining the sound quality of the speaker. Mark Hi As you may have read from my wep page, transformer made a huge difference to sound with this particular panel. Most transformers are not really suitable for full range use. Even when panel is so large it still requires some dipole equalization and signal amplitudes can be very high at low frequencies. Distortion increases much before core saturation so transformer should be designed so that there is enough headroom. I was confident earlier that high low frequency harmonic distortion that causes severe intermodulation distortion at higher frequencies was the reason to the differencies that were heard, but now when I have measured several tube amplifiers and their output transformers I am not so confident anymore. Normally high distortion at low frequencies tend to make sound warmer not colder and irritating like it was the case with earlier transformers used with Portal fullrange. We have decided not to share exact winding details of that transformer. It requires some inductance and capacitance optimization to be made on order to get it work well with so wide bandwidth and that may not be possible with simple interleaving techniques. I recommend to use high performance insulators with low dielectric values such as teflon and to minimize primary resistance. Transformer transforms voltage with low distortion but currents are not linearly transformed. That is why any extra resistance is bad in primary side. I have nothing against posting questions to DIYaudio forum. I hope that you are able to finish the project and are satisfied with the results. It required a lot of optimization time for me before I was satisfied but I have been satistified with them for amazingly long time. But nothing is forever and new plans are waiting for implementation. Arto
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Mark |
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#4 |
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diyAudio Member
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I guess there is no one interested in this topic.
I'll do what I can and do some net trawling to see if there are any related sites for audio transformers. Because that is what this basically is. Just in reverse and wound in such a way to minimise inductance as it is feeding a rather high capacitive load. I'm guessing that a normal transformer winding method would combine with the ESL panel capacitance and for a low pass filter to low to get clear highs. Mark
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Mark |
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#5 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Wisconsin
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Mark, I've been planning to do ESL transformers, too. One of many projects for the summer.
I've looked at toroids and the transformer you pictured, but both seemed too hard for this DIY'er. If you haven't tried it yet, have a look at the OPT Design Assistant software from Yvesm. It will give you an estimate of number of turns, wire size, and much more. Very impressive work from Yvesm. Here are some more links for you: http://www.geofex.com/Article_Folder...es/xformer.htm http://www.turneraudio.com.au/htmlwe...utputtrans.htm |
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#6 |
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diyAudio Moderator
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I'm interested but ignorant. I'm getting by with some UTC LS series output transformers run in reverse.
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“Listening to records is like ****ing a picture of Brigitte Bardot.” - Sergiu Celibidache |
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#7 |
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diyAudio Member
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At least there is a beginning to some info now.
Mark
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Mark |
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#8 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Scottish Borders
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Hi,
I'm not a transformer geek but does it matter that the load is essentially a capacitor? Your va loading will increase but so what. Is the core really ferrite? Could it be iron? Silicon iron for power, what iron for full range? Is the core split to allow the bobbins to slide on after winding? Is that why the bolts clamp it all back together again? If it is a split core is there a way to test the magnetic circuit to determine the gap or small enough gap after bolting? Keep the questions flowing; it gives room for directed research. Finally is your ESL really full range or is it separate panels?
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regards Andrew T. |
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#9 | |
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diyAudio Member
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Quote:
THe loudspeaker is divided up into three fullrange panels not segmented as woofer, mid tweeter. There is a lot of surface area there and from what Arto has told me he does not need a sub. All I can say is cool! More questions: Reasoning things this way. Arto wound torroids himself. And they had an amp output trannie for a while. I'm guessing that they are harder to wind. He said that the sound was harsh. I have read something similar on Sheldon Stokes website. He claimed it was transformer ringing and cured it with an appropriate resistor. What gives here? Second I too have some big momma I E core transformers and wonder if the same performance could be extracted from such a beast. THey are huge isolation transformers at least 1500 VA or better from some of the tables I have seen. If they are no good then next question is: Anybody know where to get the ferrite cores? I've never purchased ones that big. And I guess the bobbins would need to be sourced for either option. MArk
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Mark |
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#10 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Sofia
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My experience is probably irrelevant here but i'll share it anyway. During my electrostatic period (1984-1988) i worried a lot about the quality of transformers. The ones i used were all home-wound and at best did not spark too much. I tried various sizes (50-300VA cores) and never noticed too big differences. I also had some iron from a Quad 57 and it sounded remarkably close to my home-grown efforts. The panels allowed for either full range or split operation. In full range mode there was a predictable absence of high frequencies - way too much capacitance which neither the transformers, nor amps liked too much. It was possible to find a combination of directly driven thin segments and segments with reduced (just series resistors) HF which would result reasonably balanced sound.
Eventually i obtained very good sound by going for quantity rather than quality - i used a separate transformer for each crossover region - 3 per speaker. Even better was using separate amps as well. Thinking about it now i honestly don't believe that a single tranformer/panel can be made to sound good without a lot of EQ. It may be built inside the transformer parameters but it's got to be there. |
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